Authors: Olen Steinhauer
"Friends of the Sheffields, I'm sure."
"Then why don't they get out of the car, Mom?" Ever since arriving two nights ago, Tina had been unable to impress her mother with these details. Her father got it, so why couldn't she?
"Well," said Hanna, "it's nice to have you here. We haven't seen Stephanie in months."
Tina closed her eyes. How, really, could she expect her mother to understand? Both her parents knew Milo worked for the CIA, but they believed he was an analyst of some type, dealing with classified information that precluded him ever discussing his job over family dinners. They certainly never learned the true story behind their first meeting, never knew that he had been the kind of Company employee who sometimes carried a gun and even had clearance to use it.
The men who shared time in the sedan by the Sheffields' worked for the woman who had abruptly ended their vacation. Special Agent Janet Simmons. Though her initial impression had been that Simmons was probably the biggest bitch she'd ever met, now, with a few days' distance, she could recall how Simmons had been trying to show Tina how reasonable she was. "Yes, I think he murdered Angela Yates and another person. That's why I want to bring him in. But why would he run, Tina?
Can you tell me that?"
"No, I can't."
"Exactly, Tina. If he's innocent, I'm all for hearing his version. But I need him in front of me." She shook her head, and her wandering eye fixed on the far wall. "This sudden escape doesn't look good at all. Maybe you know something you're not telling me? Maybe you know where he's gone?" Tina, with all honesty, admitted she knew nothing, and over the past days she'd wondered just how little she knew at all. Even petty Patrick had his suspicions. Was that because he was such a miserable, self-pitying man, or was it because he could see what she was blind to?
Her mother was saying something that ended with ". . . fresh tortillas right off the grill."
"What was that?"
Hanna Crowe smiled and rubbed her daughter's forearm. "That new restaurant off 1-35. I was thinking we'd go tonight. What do you think?"
"Sure, Mom. That sounds good."
Miguel Crowe had been considered a big man from the time he turned nineteen and won a scholarship to the University of Texas to study engineering. Once he'd arrived in Austin from Guadalajara, he began planning for his future, making contacts with the oil company recruiters who visited twice a year. By the time he graduated, he had negotiated a position with Exxon Mobil in the Alaskan fields, bringing along his new wife, Hanna, who quit her comparative literature studies to follow her husband north. Tina was born in Nome, but by the time she was six, they had moved back to the corporate headquarters in Irving, a suburb of Dallas. He was the only Mexican national ever to have joined the board of directors when he took early retirement in 2000, amid a wave of national hatred for oil conglomerates.
Upon retiring, he bought an Austin bicycle shop fallen on hard times. He expanded the store, rebranded it, and took out ads in the
Chronicle
for what was critically referred to by locals as "the Wal-Mart of cycle stores." There was irony all over his new business venture, and Tina sometimes asked how many local stores he'd put out of business.
"Christ, Tina. I thought you'd be happy I was helping the environment."
Despite his business ethics, Tina adored her father. Nearing sixty, he was broad and dark-skinned and from certain angles looked like a Mexican wrestler. When he was with Stephanie, though, all the business went out of him, and he wanted nothing more than to stay on the floor at her level, discussing whatever the girl directed the conversation toward. That morning, he'd insisted on taking Stephanie to see the store, but by the time they got back at two they'd also visited Chuck E. Cheese's and gotten some Baskin-Robbins for dessert, which had spread a dark stain on Stephanie's lime overalls. Hanna stripped them off and went to work on the stain while Stephanie searched for some replacement clothes. Miguel also disappeared briefly, taking the day's mail to his office, then wandered back into the living room, one of the envelopes stuck in his pocket. Unconsciously, he flipped on their widescreen television. CNN informed them of stock prices.
"How was she, Dad?"
"She can charm anyone, that kid. I should use her for my negotiations."
"Didn't feed her too much, did you?"
Her father ignored that, but sat up on the couch, glancing at the empty doorway. He took the padded envelope from his pocket and tossed it onto the space between them. "Take a look at that." She lifted it and quickly read the scrawled address--her parents'--on the cover. She knew that handwriting. No return address. Inside were two crisp passports and a slip of spiral paper asking her parents to please hold the passports for T and S, Tina and Stephanie.
"My God," she muttered as she looked at her own photograph beside the name Laura Dolan. And there was Stephanie, but now named Kelley. When her mother walked in, she stuffed the passports back into the envelope, as if this were a secret between her and her father, which perhaps it was, but her mother was only walking through to the bathroom for extra detergent.
"What do you think?" Miguel asked once his wife was gone again.
"I don't know what to think."
"An escape plan, maybe?"
"Maybe."
Miguel switched to MSNBC's financial news as Hanna blew back through the room, saying, "I hope you didn't ruin her appetite, Mig."
"Just the ice cream, hon. We played games at Chuck E.'s." She answered with a doubtful
hmm
and was gone. He sighed. "I don't know what all's going on, Tina, but if he's looking to pack you and my granddaughter off to some other country, then he's going to get some serious shit from me. I'll not have it."
"He wouldn't do that."
"Then why the passports, Tina?" When she didn't answer, he started to channel-surf, muttering, "Some serious shit, indeed."
3 5
Because of its historical aloofness, Switzerland had never joined the European Union, but in a June 2005 vote its citizens chose to become part of the Schengen Agreement, opening its borders to the larger passport-free European zone. This made the trip in the Renault Clio hatchback Einner had picked up south of Paris that much easier, and they reached Switzerland in four and a half hours, Milo taking over the wheel after the third dark hour.
While still in the passenger seat, Milo continued going through Angela's papers, using Einner's penlight. Much of it was peripheral--Rahman Garang's credit card records, articles on Ugritech's installation of computer systems in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, and Sudan, and, for no apparent reason, a daily summary from the United Nations Web site:
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOON BRIEFING
U.N. Headquarters, New York
Wednesday, June 20, 2001
U.N. Mission in Sudan Discusses Ways to Further Assistance to the Implementation of Peace Agreement
*
The UN Mission in Sudan, in today's briefing, notes that, over the weekend, the acting Special Representative for Sudan, Taye Brook Zerihoun, met with the State Minister to the Presidency, Idris Abdel Gadir.
*
Their discussion focused on a proposal to hold high-level consultations between the UN Mission in Sudan and the
Government of National Unity to make the Mission's
assistance to the implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement more focused and effective.
*
Meanwhile, the UN Mission reported that yesterday, an
international NGO-hired vehicle traveling in South Darfur was shot at by an unknown armed man.
*
On that same day in West Darfur, an international NGO
convoy of two vehicles with five staff members was stopped by two unknown armed men, and the staff was robbed of
personal effects and communication equipment.
Following this was an article from, of all things, the Chinese
People's
Daily,
dated September 25, 2004:
SUDANESE GOVERNMENT FOILS COUP PLOT.
Sudan foiled a plot by Islamists to overthrow the government on Friday afternoon, the Interior Ministry said in a statement. Elements of the Popular Congress (PC) headed by jailed Islamist leader Hassan al-Turabi planned to carry out the plot in Khartoum at 2 p.m. (1100 GMT) right after the Friday prayers, said the statement. . .
That was three years ago; now, with the murder of Mullah Salih Ahmad, the rebellion was in the streets.
It was hard to concentrate. The rumble of the transmission gave him an ache in his lower spine. He was still sore from his acrobatics and short on sleep. He wanted to call Tina, to hear her voice and Stephanie's. He wanted to know exactly where they were.
Later, as he drove, Milo rubbed his face, staring into the midnight highway darkness. His mind wandered. He thought that in spy films or television shows, there was always a clear objective. A tape of a conversation that proved some important fact. A man who had the answers to a specific question. These stories were enjoyable for their very simplicity. The truth was that intelligence work seldom, if ever, ran in straight lines. Facts accumulated, many of them useless, some connecting and then disconnecting. It took a patient, trained eye to figure out which to hold on to and which to lay aside. Angela had had that kind of eye. He didn't know if he had it.
"Whoa!" said Einner, rising from sleep.
Milo blinked, then swerved the car back onto the highway.
"You suicidal or something?"
"Sorry."
"Let me take over." Einner sat up; he licked his teeth. "Where are we?"
"Just crossed over. Here." Ahead was a sign:
EXIT1
GENEVE-CENTRE
LAPRAILLE
CAROUGE
PERLY
They argued over which hotel to check into. Milo wanted something small and inconspicuous, like De Geneve.
"That
flea pit?" said Einner.
"Jesus, Milo. You want to kill us before we've had a chance to fight?" De Geneve was not a flea pit, but Einner had made it a habit on his unlimited Tourism expense accounts to stay in the finest lodgings a city had to offer. In Geneva, this meant the Hotel Beau-Rivage, overlooking Lake Geneva's harbor full of yachts.
"They track this car," said Milo, "and that's the first place they'll look."
"But they won't find the car. You really do worry too much."
"That's because I'm on the run."
"Come on. Trust me."
As he steered down Rue de la Servette, which led directly to the water, Milo almost laughed at that. Part of it was the fatigue, but more, it was a basic truth of Tourism that you trusted no one. Yet if you had to trust anyone, it had better not be another Tourist.
They left the car behind the hotel. It was nearly one in the morning, but the harbor was alive with music and people. The activity seemed to wake Einner, who snapped his fingers to the rhythm of a samba emanating from a party boat in the middle of the lake.
Einner decided to put their rooms on one of the five credit cards he had in his wallet, under the name Jack Messerstein. Once they'd gotten the keys to their adjoining rooms on the fourth floor, Einner whispered to him,
"You go on up. I'll ditch the car."
"Now?"
"I know a guy who knows a guy. And he never sleeps."
"Can I use your phone?"
Einner didn't seem sure about that.
"Don't worry," he said. "I'm not calling home." It was true. He was merely ensuring that Einner didn't receive new orders just yet.
Before going upstairs, he checked the lobby phone book--no listing for Ugrimov. With a Dolan card, he withdrew a stack of Swiss francs from an ATM and asked a desk clerk about Roman Ugrimov, an old friend living nearby. Yes, he knew Ugrimov--a man with that much flagrant wealth couldn't go unnoticed. Did he know where Roman lived? The clerk, eyeing the money, shook his head sadly, but in exchange for a few bills directed Milo to a stunning-looking prostitute sipping white wine in the hotel bar. Thinking Milo a potential customer, she touched his arm often. Once he said what he wanted, she pulled back. "You're a cop?"
"Old friend."
"My customers pay for my discretion, Mr. Old Friend."
"Then let me pay for it, too."
Roman Ugrimov, it turned out, wasn't one of her customers, but the circle of Geneva prostitutes in her class was small, and she knew a girl--
"Very young, you know. He likes them young"--who had been to his place a few times. For two hundred and fifty francs, around two hundred dollars, she made the call and scribbled Ugrimov's address on a Lowenbrau beer coaster.
The room was called "deluxe," and indeed it bore no resemblance to the hundreds of mid-to low-priced rooms he'd lived in during his life as a Tourist. The large bed had a headboard of romantic drapes; there was a sitting area with love seats; the whole room had an elegant old-world feel. The marble bathtub was built for two. The window overlooked the lake and pleasure boats and lights of the city. What a waste, he thought, being here without his family.
36
They skipped breakfast, and once they were under way Einner explained that he'd delivered the stolen Renault to a friend who ran a chop shop on the outskirts of Geneva. In return, the friend gave him a Daewoo that had been stolen in Spain, repainted, and registered under a new name with Swiss papers. For a cheap car, it gave a smooth ride, even along the mountainous northern coastline of Lake Geneva.
"You look better this morning," Einner said as he drove. "Any fresh perspectives?"
"Just that sleep is a good idea," Milo said, because that was true. It was more than simply being rested, though. It was this, reentering his old life so suddenly. He'd woken this morning sore, but feeling like he was a Tourist, and his brain had reverted to its old methods of boxing up his anxiety. It was a temporary measure, he knew, but a necessary one. It could only last so long before the anxiety burst out and broke him completely, as it had six years ago, nearly killing him. He said, "And maybe I'm starting to feel hopeful."
"I'll bet the Book has something to say about hope," said Einner. He glanced over to see if Milo would share the Black Book's knowledge on this point, which Milo was happy to do.
"It tells you to not get hooked on it."
They reached Ugrimov's estate by eleven thirty via winding mountain roads that brought them past obscured mansions to a high electrified gate clotted with video cameras and a squawk box. Milo got out of the car, crunching over gravel, and pressed the speaker button. A heavy Russian voice said, "Oui?"
Milo answered in Russian: "Please tell Roman that Charles Alexander is here to see him."
Silence followed, and he glanced back to see Einner, in the car, staring expectantly at him. The speaker clicked, and Roman Ugrimov spoke through it. "Mr. Alexander-Weaver? It's been a long time." Milo looked into one of the video cameras, smiled, and waved. "Half hour at most, Roman. I just want to talk."
"And your friend?"
"He doesn't need to come in."
"Then he can wait there."
Milo went over to the car and told Einner to stay where he was. After a few minutes, a black Mercedes appeared on the other side of the gate, rolling slowly through the trees. Two men got out, one of them familiar from their last meeting six years ago. "Nikolai," said Milo. Nikolai pretended not to remember him. His associate opened a door in the gate, and when Milo stepped through they frisked him, then locked the door again. They walked him to the car, put him in the rear, and reversed out of sight.
Milo had imagined that Ugrimov's house at the end of the long, winding driveway would be akin to a mansion, but he was wrong. The Russian, surprisingly, had more humble tastes. The Mercedes stopped in front of a low but very wide stone house that curved like a U, the bottom facing forward and the inside hiding a stone courtyard and swimming pool. That's where Ugrimov was waiting for him, sitting on an aluminum lounge chair sipping something pink and frothy. He got up with a grunting noise, set his drink on a glass table, and came over to shake Milo's hand. The last six years had turned his thick gray hair white. "It's been a long time," Ugrimov told him in Russian.
Milo agreed, then sat in a matching lounge chair that Roman Ugrimov offered.
"Something to drink? Nikolai blends a tasty grapefruit daiquiri."
"No thanks."
"As you like," he said, settling back into his own chair. The warm noontime sun made the bright stones hard to look at. "I need some information, Roman."
"Information, I can handle. Information is my business. But you're not going to threaten me again, are you?" Ugrimov asked with a smile. "I found your last threats distasteful."
"You killed that girl. I watched you."
"You weren't even looking at the terrace, Mr. Weaver. No one was. Not when she jumped." He shook his head in an imitation of grief. All this man's emotions, Milo thought, were imitations. "It was a sad enough day without you pointing fingers."
"I'm not here about her. I'm here about your company, Ugritech."
"Oh, good. I'd been hoping for some fresh investors."
"Who's Rolf Vinterberg?"
Ugrimov pursed his lips, then shook his head. "No idea."
"How about the three hundred thousand dollars placed by Rolf Vinterberg into the Union Bank of Switzerland, in an account later emptied by Samuel Roth? Or the meeting that took place here, late last year, with the Sudanese energy minister?"
The Russian considered him over the edge of his glass as he loudly slurped the last of his daiquiri. He set the glass on the table. "Do you have any idea what we at Ugritech do, Milo?"
"I don't really care."
"You should," he said, wagging a finger. "We do good things. We bring the twenty-first century to the black masses. Others look to China for the next big thing, but me, I'm an optimist. I see our future in our past, in the dark continent from which we all crawled. Africa has potential. Natural resources--minerals, oil, open terrain. It should be dictating its own terms. But it's not. Why do you think that is?"
Milo wasn't sure if Ugrimov was being serious. "Corrupt governments?"
"True, yes. But that's not the cause; it's an effect. At the root of Africa's problems lies a single word: ignorance."
Milo rubbed his nose and sat up straighten "Roman, I'm not interested in your racist views."
The Russian laughed loudly at that, then quickly settled down. "Don't turn politically correct on me. Of course they're not stupid. Ignorance is the lack of objective knowledge, which is an African curse. Why do villagers believe condoms will not prevent the spread of AIDS?"
"Because Catholic priests tel them so."
"Very good. In that case, the Catholic Church encourages African ignorance. And why do some believe that sex with a virgin will kill the HIV
virus?"
"I get your point, Roman."
"I see you do. Ugritech--and, please, I do know the egomania the name suggests--is one effort to break the gridlock of African ignorance. We start with computers, hooked into the Internet. Last year, we installed two
thousand
computers in Nairobi schools and community centers."
"How many in Khartoum?"
"About the same amount. I don't remember."
"Is that why the energy minister visited you here?" Ugrimov looked at his empty daiquiri glass. "Nikolai!" he called, and the bald man appeared. "Do you mind?"
Apparently, Nikolai didn't. He took the glass and went back inside.
"Well?" said Milo.
Roman Ugrimov put his palms together in front of his lips. "You, Milo Weaver--there are stories going around now that you're on the run. Is that right?"
A pause. "Yes."
"A man on the run from his own people suddenly shows up on my doorstep. It's strange, isn't it?"
"Are you going to answer my questions, or not?"
"Please. You're in such a rush. You really should try a daiquiri."
"Thank you, but no."
"Did you kill someone?"
"No."
"But of course I shouldn't believe you, should I? You never believed that I didn't kill my dear Ingrid, even though I told you that she took her own life."
"Fair enough."
A sudden smile flashed across Ugrimov's face. "Remember when we last talked? You were upset, of course. I mean, you'd been shot, hadn't you?
Anyone would be upset."
"I was upset because you wouldn't answer my questions," Milo remembered aloud. "You wouldn't tell me why Frank Dawdle had visited you. You might as well tell me now."
"You ask a lot."
Milo shrugged.
"It was simple, Mr. Weaver. Franklin Dawdle wanted a new identity. South African. He knew I had contacts who could make this happen quickly."